Unrelated Death After Colorectal Cancer Screening: Implications for Improving Colonoscopy Referrals
The observed mortality < 5 years after the index colonoscopy lowered the overall impact of screening, which should prompt health care providers to perform a more thorough assessment of the potential reduced benefit for individual veterans when incorporating cancer risk, comorbidity burden, and age-based criteria.
Limitations
In this study, we examined a cohort of veterans enrolled in CRC screening within a single institution and obtained survival data for a mean follow-up of > 7 years. We also restricted our study to patients undergoing examinations that explicitly listed screening as indication or polyp surveillance for the test. However, inclusion was based on the indication listed in the report, which may differ from the intent of the ordering provider. Reporting systems often come with default settings, which may skew data. Comorbidities for the entire cohort of veterans who died within the time frame of the study were extracted from the chart without controlling for time-dependent changes, which may more appropriately describe the comorbidity burden at the time of the test. Using a case-control design, we addressed this potential caveat and included only illnesses recorded in the encounter linked to the colonoscopy order. Despite these limitations, our results highlight the importance to more effectively define and target appropriate candidates for CRC screening.
Conclusion
This study shows that age is a simple but not sufficiently accurate criterion to define potential candidates for CRC screening. As automated reminders often prompt discussions about and referral to screening examinations, we should develop algorithms that estimate the individual cancer risk and/or integrate an automatically calculated comorbidity index with these alerts or insert such a tool into order-sets. In addition, providers and patients need to be educated about the rationale and need for a more comprehensive approach to CRC screening that considers anticipated life expectancy. On an individual and health system level, our goal should be to reduce overall mortality rather than only cancer-specific death rates.
